US6984047B2 - Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation - Google Patents

Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US6984047B2
US6984047B2 US10/167,135 US16713502A US6984047B2 US 6984047 B2 US6984047 B2 US 6984047B2 US 16713502 A US16713502 A US 16713502A US 6984047 B2 US6984047 B2 US 6984047B2
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
groove
vee
cutting tool
plane
undulating
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime, expires
Application number
US10/167,135
Other versions
US20030075815A1 (en
Inventor
Dennis I. Couzin
Sidney A. Heenan, deceased
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Avery Dennison Corp
Original Assignee
Avery Dennison Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Avery Dennison Corp filed Critical Avery Dennison Corp
Priority to US10/167,135 priority Critical patent/US6984047B2/en
Assigned to AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION reassignment AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: COUZIN, DENNIS I.
Assigned to AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION reassignment AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: HEENAN, SIDNEY A. (DECEASED) BY RONALD A. SANDLER, EXECUTOR
Publication of US20030075815A1 publication Critical patent/US20030075815A1/en
Priority to US11/216,564 priority patent/US7427139B2/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US6984047B2 publication Critical patent/US6984047B2/en
Assigned to AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION reassignment AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION CHANGE OF CORPORATE ADDRESS Assignors: AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION
Assigned to AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION reassignment AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION CHANGE OF CORPORATE ADDRESS Assignors: AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION
Adjusted expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29DPRODUCING PARTICULAR ARTICLES FROM PLASTICS OR FROM SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE
    • B29D11/00Producing optical elements, e.g. lenses or prisms
    • B29D11/00605Production of reflex reflectors
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B5/00Optical elements other than lenses
    • G02B5/12Reflex reflectors
    • G02B5/122Reflex reflectors cube corner, trihedral or triple reflector type
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02BOPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
    • G02B5/00Optical elements other than lenses
    • G02B5/12Reflex reflectors
    • G02B5/122Reflex reflectors cube corner, trihedral or triple reflector type
    • G02B5/124Reflex reflectors cube corner, trihedral or triple reflector type plural reflecting elements forming part of a unitary plate or sheet
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C2793/00Shaping techniques involving a cutting or machining operation
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S359/00Optical: systems and elements
    • Y10S359/90Methods
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10T428/24Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.]
    • Y10T428/24479Structurally defined web or sheet [e.g., overall dimension, etc.] including variation in thickness
    • Y10T428/2457Parallel ribs and/or grooves

Definitions

  • This invention relates to a method of making a retroreflective article having controlled divergence, and articles made by the method.
  • retroreflective articles can be made from an array of microcube corner elements.
  • Such an array of microcube corner elements can be made by ruling a master of “male” cube corners into a planar surface of a plate. This is taught generally by Stamm U.S. Pat. No. 3,712,706; and also is taught in detail in Pricone U.S. Pat. No. 4,478,769. Each of these patents is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 4,478,769 describes a well-known method of making triangular cube corner elements, in which the planar surface of a master plate is ruled with a diamond cutting tool that cuts a series of precise parallel vee-grooves.
  • a diamond cutting tool that cuts a series of precise parallel vee-grooves.
  • three sets of parallel grooves intersecting one another at angles of 60° are made; each groove also will have an included angle of substantially 70.53° disposed symmetrically, and will be ruled to a groove depth determined by the height of the cube corners desired.
  • This method automatically results in an array of pairs of oppositely oriented equilateral triangular microcubes on the face of the master.
  • the grooves within the parallel sets will contain angles other than 70.53°, and intersect at angles other than 60°, as disclosed, for example in Rowland U.S. Pat. No. 3,384,348.
  • Methods for ruling non-triangle cube corners generally do not use three sets of parallel symmetrically disposed vee-grooves, but the faces of the cube corners are nevertheless formed from the walls of grooves, as disclosed, for example in Nelson U.S. Pat. No. 4,938,563.
  • the ruled master may then be used to make a series of duplicates, such as by electroforming, and the duplicates are assembled together to form a single “mother” tool.
  • the assembled “mother” tool is used to electroform molds, which then can be assembled into a tool capable of providing microcube retroreflective elements on a web of plastic sheeting material such as by embossing, casting, or other methods known in the art.
  • Microcube corner retroreflective sheeting such as made by the method described above is used in highway safety applications such as highway signs and pavement markers.
  • the microcube corner elements retroreflect light from a vehicle's headlights back to the driver of the vehicle.
  • This is an inexact retroreflection in which the divergence angle, ⁇ , ranges between approximately 0° and more than 3°.
  • the value of ⁇ operative in any given situation depends on the geometry of the vehicle and the distance from the vehicle to the retroreflective material.
  • the divergence angle ⁇ for a large truck's right headlight and its driver at a distance of about 40 meters from a road sign will be approximately 3°
  • the divergence angle ⁇ for an automobile's left headlight and its driver at a distance of about 600 meters from a road sign will be approximately 0.05°.
  • Also associated with the divergence angle, ⁇ , is a rotation angle, ⁇ , which is a measure of the direction of the divergence.
  • also associated with the divergence angle. The value of ⁇ will be different for left and right headlights of a vehicle, and will also depend on the vehicle geometry and the position of the road sign.
  • microcube corner retroreflective sheeting used in road signs will produce a pattern of retroreflected light having sufficient intensity over a range of divergence angle values and rotation angle values.
  • a non-urban retroreflective highway sign should retroreflect light through a divergence angle ⁇ of about 1°, which corresponds to the value of ⁇ from a large truck's right headlight back to its driver at a distance of about 120 meters from the road sign.
  • microcube corner retroreflective sheeting may be retroreflective over only a very narrow range of divergence angle, such as about 0.0–0.5 degrees, as well as narrow ranges of rotation angle. It would be preferred to provide a ruled array with cube corners producing the entire desired range of divergence and within very short distances on the ruled array.
  • micro-sized cube corner elements Light that is retroreflected by micro-sized cube corner elements will experience a certain amount of diffraction because of the very small size of the microcubes. Such diffraction will result in retroreflection over broader ranges of both divergence angle and rotation angle.
  • the particular ranges of ⁇ and ⁇ will depend on the particular diffraction pattern of a given microcube, which will depend in turn upon the cube size, cube shape, the index of refraction of the cube material, and upon whether or not the cube faces have been metallized.
  • Diffraction is not a desirable method to enhance retroreflection through broader divergence and rotational angle, because the very small microcubes that achieve greater diffraction also cause a substantial quantity of light to be retroreflected with a divergence angle ⁇ of greater than about 3°, where the light is not useful to the vehicle driver. This is summarized in Table 1.
  • Table 1 indicates the spreading of retroreflection due to diffraction.
  • Acrylic equilateral triangle cube corners are used in each case.
  • the millimeter dimension measures the edge length of the triangle (identically 2.449 ⁇ the cube depth, or 1.155 ⁇ the ruling spacing).
  • the percentages indicate how much of the total retroreflected flux is within a 1°, 2°, or 3° maximum observation angle. For example, for the triangle cube corner with side 0.05 mm only 27.9% of the total retroreflected light arrives between 0° and 1° observation angles.
  • FIGS. 4A–D Diffraction results in idiosyncratic patterns which are unlikely to distribute the retroreflected light in a manner that will be most useful to a vehicle's driver. This is shown in FIGS. 4A–D .
  • U.S. Pat. No. 4,775,219 to Appledorn discloses retroreflective articles having tailored divergence profiles, wherein the cube corner elements are formed by three intersecting sets of parallel vee-grooves, and wherein at least one of the sets includes, in a repeating pattern, at least two groove side angles that differ from one another.
  • U.S. Pat. No. 6,015,214 to Heenan et al. assigned to the common assignee, teaches methods of forming microcubes by ruling vee-grooves into the edges of a plurality of flat plates, and discloses that the tilt angle of a cutting tool with respect to the surface of the edges being ruled can be adjusted continuously as each groove is cut as a function of the distance traveled by the cutting tool along the ruled surface.
  • a retroreflective article having a controlled broader divergence is provided by ruling one or more sets of generally parallel vee-grooves to form a plurality of cube corner elements, each vee-groove having two side walls that intersect at a groove root, in which ruling non-uniform deviations of the cube dihedral angles from exactly 90° are intentionally introduced by causing the cutting tool and the surface of the substrate to oscillate with respect to one another in a controlled manner during the ruling of at least one of the vee-grooves.
  • the vee-groove so formed will be an undulating groove.
  • the cube corner element dihedral angles having at least one face defined by a side wall of an undulating vee-groove will be non-orthogonal to varying extents, depending on the phase, frequency, and amplitude of the oscillation during ruling.
  • This introduction of variable, controlled non-orthogonality of dihedral angles within very short distances of each other on a single ruled groove will result in a controlled broader divergence of the ultimate retroreflective article made from such ruled cube corner elements.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a substrate oriented in the x-y plane and having a vee-groove ruled in the y-direction using the method of the prior art
  • FIG. 2 illustrates a small portion of an array of cube corner elements made in accordance with the first described mode of practicing the invention, in which the magnitude of the groove undulation and the deviations of the dihedral angles are greatly exaggerated for the sake of illustration.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a small portion of an array of cube corner elements made in accordance with the third described mode of practicing the invention, in which the magnitude of the groove undulation and the deviations of the dihedral angles are greatly exaggerated for the sake of illustration.
  • FIGS. 4A–D illustrate diffraction patterns from four different prior art unaberrated cube corners.
  • the patterns show observation angle from 0° to 3° over all rotation angles.
  • the entrance angle is 0°.
  • the illustrations scale the pattern logarithmically so that one step corresponds to retroreflectance difference of approximately 2.5 times.
  • FIG. 4A is for an uncanted acrylic triangle cube, 0.2 mm base dimension, 0.082 mm ruling depth.
  • FIG. 4B is for the identical cube corner when aluminized.
  • FIG. 4C is for a ⁇ 9.74° (face more parallel) canted acrylic triangle cube, 0.256 mm base, 0.091 mm ruling depth.
  • FIG. 4D is for a +11.17° (edge more parallel) acrylic triangle cube, 0.194 mm base, 0.089 mm ruling depth. Cube sizes have been chosen having equal optical active areas for purpose of diffraction comparison.
  • FIG. 5 illustrates the calculated diffraction pattern for the prior art cube corner of FIG. 4A , but with a simple aberration of +14 arc minutes on each dihedral angle.
  • the geometric spot pattern has an average divergence of 1.1°.
  • FIGS. 6A–B illustrate calculated diffraction patterns for the cube corner of FIG. 4A , but with aberrations in accordance with the first mode of the present invention.
  • FIG. 6A uses a sinusoidal undulation on each of three grooves sufficient to give the geometric pattern an average divergence of 1.1°.
  • FIG. 6B uses a combination of a simple aberration of 9 arc minutes on each dihedral angle with a sinusoidal undulation on each of three grooves sufficient to give the geometric pattern an average divergence of 1.1°.
  • FIGS. 7A–B illustrate calculated diffraction patterns for the cube corner of FIG. 4A , but with aberrations in accordance with the first mode of the present invention being applied unequally to the three grooves.
  • FIG. 7A only one of the three grooves receives sinusoidal undulation.
  • FIG. 7B two of the three grooves receive sinusoidal undulation.
  • the geometric light pattern has an average divergence of 1.1°.
  • FIG. 8 compares of two forms of undulation called “sin” and “sin ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2 sin 2 ”.
  • FIG. 9 compares the calculated observation angularity of the prior art aberrationless triangle cube corner for FIG. 4A , with four triangle cube corners aberrated in accordance with the instant invention, being those for FIG. 5 , FIG. 6A , the “sin ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2 sin 2 ” variant of FIG. 6A , and FIG. 6B .
  • FIG. 10 illustrates the application of equations (1)–(3) to the first described mode of the invention.
  • FIG. 11 illustrates the application of equations (4)–(6) to the second described mode of the invention.
  • FIG. 12 illustrates the application of equations (10)–(12) to the third and fourth described modes of the invention.
  • Cube corner retroreflective articles made by a process including the step of ruling one or more sets of generally parallel vee-grooves in a surface with a vee-shaped cutting tool can be provided with a controlled broader divergence by oscillating the cutting tool and the substrate with respect to one another in a controlled manner as the tool cuts one or more vee-grooves.
  • the controlled oscillation during ruling will result in an undulating vee-groove producing a controlled variation in the dihedral angles of the cube corner elements on either side of the undulating groove, which will controllably broaden the divergence of the ultimate retroreflective article.
  • an entire desired range of divergence will be provided over very short increments of groove length.
  • Attitude shall mean the orientation of a defined axis of a cutting tool relative to the substrate surface to be ruled.
  • the defined axis will begin at the tool tip and point generally away from the substrate surface.
  • cube corner elements as used herein includes those elements consisting of three mutually intersecting faces, the dihedral angles of which are generally on the order of 90°, but not necessarily exactly 90°.
  • groove root as used herein means the continuous curve defined by the motion of the point of the cutting tool under the surface being ruled.
  • a “groove root” cut in accordance with the method of this invention can be either straight or wavy, depending on the mode of operation of the instant invention.
  • groove angle means the included angle, measured in a plane normal to the groove root, between the two walls of the groove cut into the surface by the cutting tool at any given point along the groove length.
  • the cutting tool and the substrate oscillate with respect to one another shall mean that during the ruling of a vee-groove either the cutting tool oscillates with respect to the substrate, or the substrate oscillates with respect to the cutting tool, or both the cutting tool and the substrate oscillate at the same time, so as to create an undulating vee-groove.
  • divergence is the angle between a light ray that enters a retroreflecting element (e.g., a cube corner) and the light ray after leaving that element.
  • a retroreflecting element e.g., a cube corner
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a perspective view of a substrate 20 having a planar surface 22 on which vee-grooves can be ruled with a vee-shaped cutting tool, such as is known in the art.
  • the substrate 20 is oriented with the surface 22 to be ruled disposed in the x-y reference plane of the x-y-z orthogonal reference system, wherein the z direction is perpendicular to the surface 22 .
  • FIG. 1 further illustrates a typical vee-groove 24 of the prior art ruled parallel to the y-axis, with the groove root 25 being a straight line at a constant z-depth relative to the surface 22 , and the groove having constant included angle.
  • the instant invention will be described in terms of four modes of operation. It will be understood, however, that these four modes of operation are not necessarily mutually exclusive, and that two or more such modes of operation can be employed simultaneously.
  • the modes of operation are described and illustrated herein with respect to the simplest case in which the cube corner elements being ruled are uncanted equilateral triangles.
  • the applicability of the instant invention is not so limited, however, and the methods of the invention can be applied to canted triangular rulings, and hexagonal and rectangular cube corner elements such as are illustrated and described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,914,813 (Smith et al.); U.S. Pat. No. 5,721,640 (Smith et al.); U.S. Pat. No.
  • FIG. 8 illustrates two forms of undulation curves suitable for use in the various modes of operation of the instant invention.
  • the curve labeled “sin” is a perfect sinusoid.
  • the curve labeled “sin ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2 sin 2 ” follows the function sin ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2 sin 2 from 0 to ⁇ and then the function sin ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2 sin 2 from ⁇ to 2 ⁇ , and continues to alternate between the two functions.
  • the sin ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2/sin 2 undulation by having nearly flatted regions, gives more weight to the unaberrated cubes.
  • the sin undulation was adjusted to 0.6*sin so as to produce the same average geometric divergence as the sin ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2/sin 2 undulation, in order to provide a more appropriate basis of comparison. It will be understood that the horizontal and vertical scales of FIG. 8 require further adjustment to the dimensions of the cube corner ruling, such as shown in Table 2.
  • the notation ⁇ dot over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ shall mean the change in the rise or fall of each groove root introduced by the first mode of operation of the instant invention; the notation ⁇ umlaut over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ shall mean the change in the direction of the groove root within the x-y plane introduced by the second mode of operation of the instant invention; and the notation ⁇ ... shall mean the change in the half angles of the respective grooves as ruled in accordance with both the third and fourth modes of operation of the instant invention.
  • the cutting tool is maintained at a constant attitude with respect to the substrate, and during the ruling of at least one vee-groove the cutting tool and the substrate oscillate with respect to one another in a vertical direction, i.e., in a direction parallel to the z-axis of FIG. 1 .
  • This will result in a vee-groove having a non-constant groove angle.
  • the resulting groove root is a vertically undulating curve.
  • the two-dimensional projection of the groove root in the x-y plane is a straight line. However, the intersection of the groove wall with the x-y plane is a horizontally undulating curve.
  • the same effect can be achieved either by holding the substrate in a fixed position, and moving the tip of the cutting tool in a vertically undulating curve, while maintaining the attitude of the cutting tool constant, or by vertical oscillation of the substrate while the cutting tool is moving in a straight line, or by simultaneous out-of-phase movement in the z-direction of both the cutting tool and the substrate.
  • the choice of whether to move the cutting tool, or the substrate, or both during the cutting of the vee-groove will depend upon the design and functionality of the graver that controls the cutting tool and the fixture that holds the substrate.
  • a first, inconsequential, effect of this first mode of operation of the instant invention is the introduction of intersection errors in a pattern of ruled triangular cube corner elements. That is, even if the other two groove sets are formed entirely of straight grooves of the prior art, the vertically undulating groove root made in accordance with the first mode of operation of the instant invention will not always intersect the vertices of the other two groove sets at their exact points of intersection.
  • a second, consequential, effect of this first mode of operation of the invention is the purposeful introduction of variations or “errors” in the dihedral angles of cubes having a cube face formed by a side wall of an undulating groove.
  • the frequency of the oscillation will be such that one period of oscillation spans several cube corner widths.
  • the groove root segment is essentially descending, essentially ascending, or essentially level.
  • the cube dihedral angle terminating at or near the lower end of a groove root segment will be slightly more obtuse than had the groove root been level.
  • the cube dihedral angle terminating at or near the raised end of a groove root segment will be slightly more acute, than had the groove root segment been level.
  • the change to the cube dihedral angle is the groove slope angle divided by ⁇ 6.
  • the deviation in depth of each groove will affect the two dihedral angles defined in part by that groove side wall, with the total effect on the dihedral angles being very nearly additive.
  • FIG. 10 summarizes the aberrations due to the first mode when the undulation is long enough that curvature within a single cube is insignificant.
  • a male equilateral triangle cube corner is illustrated as formed by three grooves. Each of the grooves g 1 , g 2 , g 3 are shown rising by a corresponding angular amount ⁇ dot over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ 1 , ⁇ dot over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ 2 , ⁇ dot over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ 3 in the direction indicated. If a ⁇ dot over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ value is negative, then the groove is instead falling.
  • the three dihedral edges are labeled with their angle errors, e 1 ; e 2 ; e 3 , that is, their deviations from perfect 90°.
  • the dihedral angle errors are given by approximate equations (1)–(3). e 1 ⁇ ⁇ . 3 - ⁇ . 2 6 ( 1 ) e 2 ⁇ ⁇ . 1 - ⁇ . 3 6 ( 2 ) e 3 ⁇ ⁇ . 2 - ⁇ . 1 6 ( 3 )
  • FIG. 2 roughly represents a portion of a single groove g ruled in accordance with the first mode of operation of the invention, viewed as a projection in the x-y plane, wherein the depth of the cutting tool is varied with respect to the plane of ruling.
  • the tip of the cutting tool is rising as the tool moves along the groove g from left to right in the Figure.
  • dihedral angle d 1 terminates at or near the lower end of the groove root segment
  • dihedral angle d 2 terminates at or near the raised end of a groove root segment.
  • the dihedral angles d 1 will be slightly greater than 90°
  • the dihedral angles d 2 will be slightly less than 90°.
  • the dihedral angles d 1 and d 2 need not terminate exactly at groove root g, but can terminate near the groove root. It also may be seen that the dihedral angle d 3 is unaffected by the undulation of groove root g.
  • the cutting tool is maintained at a constant attitude and a constant depth with respect to the substrate, and during the ruling of at least one vee-groove the cutting tool and the substrate oscillate with respect to one another in a horizontal direction sidewise to the direction of ruling.
  • This will result in a groove of constant depth along the z-axis and substantially constant groove angle, and wherein the groove root is an undulating curve in a plane parallel to the x-y plane.
  • a first, inconsequential, effect of this second mode of operation of the instant invention is the introduction of intersection errors in a pattern of ruled triangular cube corner elements. That is, even if the other two groove sets are formed entirely of straight grooves of the prior art, the horizontally undulating groove root made in accordance with the second mode of operation of the instant invention will not always intersect the vertices of the other two groove sets at their exact points of intersection.
  • a second, consequential, effect of this second mode of operation of the invention is that the three corner angles of a triangular cube corner are modified.
  • the dihedral angle of a triangle cube corner is made acute if it meets a triangle corner at which the angle has been modified to be smaller.
  • the dihedral angle of a triangle cube corner is made obtuse if it meets a triangle corner at which the angle has been modified to be larger.
  • the change to a dihedral angle is approximately equal to the change to the corresponding triangle corner angle divided by ⁇ 3.
  • FIG. 11 summarizes aberrations resulting from the second mode when the undulation is long enough that curvature within a single cube is insignificant.
  • a male equilateral triangle cube corner is illustrated as formed by three grooves. Each of the grooves forming the triangle is shown rotated by a corresponding angular amount ⁇ umlaut over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ 1 , ⁇ umlaut over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ 2 , ⁇ umlaut over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ 3 in the direction indicated. If a ⁇ umlaut over ( ⁇ ) ⁇ value is negative, then the groove is rotated oppositely.
  • a third mode of operation of the invention at least one vee-groove is ruled so that the movement of the tip of the cutting tool defines a straight groove root parallel to the x-y plane, and the attitude of the cutting tool oscillates within a plane containing the groove root. That is, the upper end of the cutting tool oscillates to and fro parallel to the direction of the groove.
  • the attitude of the tool with respect to the substrate must be controlled as a function of the position of the cutting tool along the groove.
  • the center of oscillation is preferably the tip of the cutting tool. This mode produces a groove having groove walls that undulate such that the included groove angle expands and contracts along the length of the groove.
  • the included groove angle will vary continuously according to the well-known adjustment technique for groove angle.
  • H tan - 1 ⁇ ( tan ⁇ ⁇ h cos ⁇ ⁇ R ) ( 8 )
  • ⁇ R may be positive or negative.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates ten cube corners along a portion of a groove that narrows from left to right.
  • the groove walls produced in accordance with this third mode of the invention will intersect the x-y plane in undulatory curves corresponding to the variations in included groove angle.
  • These variations of the groove angle along the length of the groove will result in variations in the dihedral angles of the cube corner elements defined in part by the groove side walls.
  • the two dihedral angles d 1 and d 2 are approximately equal, while their averaged value decreases from cube to cube from left to right along the illustrated portion of groove g.
  • the dihedral angles d 3 remain unaffected.
  • FIG. 12 summarizes the aberrations due to the third mode when the undulation is long enough that curvature within a single cube is insignificant.
  • a male equilateral triangle cube corner is illustrated as formed by three grooves. Each of the grooves forming the triangle are designated by their half-groove angle errors, ⁇ ... 1 , ⁇ ... 2 , ⁇ ... 3 , that is, their deviations from perfect 35.26°
  • the three dihedral edges are labeled with their angle errors, e 1 , e 2 , e 3 , that is, their deviations from perfect 90°.
  • the dihedral angle errors are then given by approximate equations (10)–(12). e 1 ⁇ ⁇ ... 3 + ⁇ ...
  • the fourth mode of operation of the invention uses “side-to-side” oscillation of the cutting tool. That is, the tip of the cutting tool still defines a straight groove root parallel to the x-y plane, while the attitude of the cutting tool oscillates within planes perpendicular to the groove root. That is, the attitude oscillates transverse to the direction of the ruling.
  • the magnitude of the groove angle itself will not change along the length of the groove
  • the progressive change in attitude of the cutting tool along the groove will result in variations in the angle between the x-y plane and the groove walls that produce the cube corner elements on either side of the groove.
  • the undulatory method of the instant invention can give deviations from flatness of the ruled cube corner faces on the order of 0.01°. For the sizes of cube corners contemplated, this will be just a small fraction of a wavelength of visible light. This effect will be insignificant, particularly when the retroreflective article made from the cube corner array is sheeting, retroreflective fabric, or traffic control devices.
  • the first and second modes, applied as described result in cube corners with no net dihedral angle error. It is sometimes desireable to have net dihedral angle error, as shown in Example 4 below.
  • a bias error beneath the errors produced by undulation For example, the groove angles can be chosen different from the perfect 70.53°, and these imperfect grooves can be subjected to vertical (first mode) or horizontal (second mode) undulation.
  • equations (10)–(12) may be solved for the groove errors in terms of the dihedral errors. This gives new equations (13)–(15). ⁇ ... 1 ⁇ - e 1 + e 2 + e 3 2 ( 13 ) ⁇ ... 2 ⁇ + e 1 - e 2 + e 3 2 ( 14 ) ⁇ ... 3 ⁇ + e 1 + e 2 - e 3 2 ( 15 )
  • the result will be that the dihedral angles of the cube corner elements formed by the grooves cut by the inventive method will differ from one cube corner element to the next.
  • This non-equivalency of the cube corner elements will broaden, in a controlled manner, the divergence of a retroreflective structure made from an array including the non-equivalent cube corner elements.
  • the modes of operation described above can be used in any combination.
  • the groove variations can be made in any number of grooves in a set, and in one, two, or three sets. If grooves in more than one set are varied, the result will be, in general, a randomized combination of three dihedral angles in each cube.
  • each undulation can be a compound undulation, produced by a combination of any number of the basic four modes, or any other mode, of oscillation.
  • the graver can be oscillating both vertically and horizontally at once (mode 1+mode 2), or it can be rocking to-and-fro and side-to-side at once (mode 3+mode 4), or any of the nine other logical combinations.
  • the amplitude and length of undulations need not agree.
  • the equation sets (1)–(3), (4)–(6), and (10)–(12) can be separately applied to obtain the dihedral angle errors for one cube, and the separate results added to determine the dihedral angle errors of the compound mode undulation.
  • FIGS. 10–12 and corresponding equation sets (1)–(3), (4)–(6), and (10)–(12) show the effect of the different modes of the invention on the aberration of a single cube corner.
  • the purpose of this invention is to enable the optical designer to produce an array with a great variety of aberrated cube corners.
  • Each triangle cube corner has six contiguous neighbors (two at each of its vertices) with its same orientation.
  • Each of these neighbors of the first cube corner will in general have quite different aberrations from the first, because these neighbors will be formed from one groove in common with the first, which will have changed slightly, and two grooves not in common with the first, which can have undulations out of phase with the undulations of the corresponding grooves forming the first cube.
  • the first example is the perfect, unaberrated cube corner with retroreflected light pattern shown in FIG. 4A .
  • the geometric light pattern must have zero divergence, but the cube size introduces noticeable diffraction, as summarized in Table 1.
  • the observation angle aspect of the diffraction light pattern is also shown in FIG. 9 as the curve labelled “aberrationless”.
  • the curve in FIG. 9 is derived from FIG. 4A .
  • the geometrical light pattern from a single cube corner consists of six punctal spots, as explained in the cited work of P. R. Yoder, Jr. An unaberrated cube corner produces its six spots in coincidence.
  • different techniques are used to aberrate cube corners.
  • the aberrations in each of these examples are chosen so that the geometrical light pattern in each case has average divergence approximately 1.1°, where the divergence is measured from the centroid of all the punctal spots. All illustrations show diffraction light patterns rather than geometrical patterns, as this is what small cube corners really produce.
  • Example 2 represents the simplest way known to the prior art to make an array of aberrated cube corners having average geometric divergence of 1.1°. Each dihedral angle of each cube corner is made 14 minutes greater than the perfect 90°.
  • FIG. 5 shows the resulting diffraction pattern. Most of the energy is near the characteristic six punctal spots as described above, which diffraction joins into a ring.
  • FIG. 9 shows the ring as a hump in the curve labeled 14 , 14 , 14 , peaking at about 1.1°.
  • the average intensity at 1.1° observation angle is about eight times the intensity at 0° observation angle.
  • a retroreflector of this kind would not have road applications since it only functions well over such a short range of observation angles that, at any distance, the full range of vehicles (from trucks to cars) could not benefit. It could have specialized applications for instrumentation.
  • Examples 3–6 illustrate rulings that can be made in accordance with the instant invention.
  • the illustrative rulings have planned aberrations that result in broadened divergence profiles.
  • the undulations are adjusted to give the same average geometric divergence, 1.1°, as in prior art Example 2.
  • FIGS. 6A and 6B illustrate smooth divergence spreadings achieved with the rulings of Examples 3 and 4, while FIGS. 7A and 7B show some limited aiming capabilities achieved with the rulings of Examples 5 and 6.
  • Table 2 gives the ruling details corresponding to Examples 3–6.
  • FIG. 9 illustrates the observation angularity achieved with the rulings of Examples 1–4, as well as the 33[sin ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2 sin 2 ]
  • Example 3 sinusoidal vertical undulation is assumed according to Mode 1 of this invention. Ruling dimensions are shown in Table 2 under 20[sin].
  • FIG. 6A shows the resulting calculated diffraction pattern. It has a gentle central peak and is uncluttered with diffraction and aberration artifacts out to about 2° observation angle. This is the beneficial result of the cube corners not being alike as they were in Examples 1 and 2.
  • FIG. 9 shows the observation angularity of Example 3 as curve 20[sin]. Its intensity at 1.1° is only 37% that of prior art Example 2 at 1.1°. However its intensity at 0° is 16 times that of prior art Example 2, and its intensity at 2° is 2.2 times that of prior art Example 2.
  • a retroreflector having the aberrated cube corners of Example 3 is not limited to close applications, but performs well over a broad distance range.
  • Example 4 sinusoidal vertical undulation according to Mode 1 is assumed in combination with a bias of 9 arc minutes error on each dihedral angle. That is, all the grooves are initially planned to make 9 arc minutes of dihedral error and a sinusoidal undulation 15/20 as great as that of Example 3 is superimposed on this. Ruling dimensions are given in Table 2 under 9+15[sin].
  • FIG. 6B shows the resulting diffraction pattern, practically flat to about 1.5°. It must be appreciated that the diffraction pattern illustrations are logarithmically scaled and one step corresponds to difference in retroreflectance of approximately 2.5 times.
  • FIG. 9 shows that the observation angularity of Example 4 is nearly flat to about 1.5°. Example 4 could function as a close distance retroreflector in road applications.
  • Example 5 shows the effect of sinusoidal vertical undulation according to Mode 1 but assumed for only one set of grooves, G 3 , of the three sets of grooves G 1 , G 2 , G 3 ruled to make triangular cube corners. Ruling dimensions are given in Table 2 under “35[sin] on G 3 .” Equations (1)–(3) show how this affects two of the three dihedral angles.
  • FIG. 7A shows the diffraction pattern. This example illustrates how the method can produce patterns with directed observation angularity. This is the reason this Example 5 is not included among the curves of FIG. 9 , which are averages over all directions.
  • Example 6 shows the effect of sinusoidal vertical undulation according to Mode 1 assumed for two of the three groove sets. Ruling dimensions are given in Table 2 under “24[sin] on G 1 &G 2 .” Equations (1)–(3) show how this affects two of the three dihedral angles. FIG. 7B shows the diffraction pattern. This example illustrates a different type of directed observation angularity that can be achieved with the method of the instant invention.
  • the entire desired range of divergence will be provided over a short increment of groove length, in order to avoid a spotty appearance.
  • Practical undulatory methods are possible in which the graver makes its entire cycle of change within 4 mm.
  • typical groove undulations have approximately 10 micron amplitude over 4 mm cycle.
  • sinusoidal undulation on all three of the grooves results in cube corner dihedral angle errors having a distribution curve that can be described as resembling the shape of a smaller triangle mounted upon a larger trapezoid.
  • the amplitude of the movement of either the cutting tool, or the substrate, or both can be either constant or variable, both along the length of a single groove and from one groove to the next, thus facilitating controlled broadening of observation angularity anywhere on the ruled substrate as desired by the ruling designer.
  • modes When modes are compounded, they need not agree in amplitude or length.
  • controlled variability can be introduced into one, two, or all three of the groove sets, in the ruling of triangular microcubes, and into some or all of the grooves in each groove set.
  • the rulings made by the methods described herein can be used to make retroreflective products according to methods known in the art.
  • the ruled surface can be replicated through successive generations, and the replicates can be assembled together either with or without replicates of unaberrated cube corner arrays. Seamless copies of the assembly can be made such as by electrodeposition of nickel to provide tools of uniform thickness.
  • Tools having such patterns of cube corner elements can be used to manufacture retroreflective products such as sheeting.
  • Such manufacturing methods are known in the art and include, for example, embossing, casting, and compression molding.
  • the tool of the instant invention can be used in each of these manufacturing methods and variations thereof.

Abstract

A ruling of cube corner elements comprising intersecting ruled vee-grooves is characterized in that at least one of the vee-grooves is made such the substrate being ruled and the cutting tool are oscillated with respect to one another during the ruling of the vee-groove. Rulings made in accordance with the instant invention can be designed to produce a cube corner element having broader divergence.

Description

This patent application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/297,394 filed Jun. 11, 2001.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a method of making a retroreflective article having controlled divergence, and articles made by the method.
It is well known that retroreflective articles can be made from an array of microcube corner elements. Such an array of microcube corner elements can be made by ruling a master of “male” cube corners into a planar surface of a plate. This is taught generally by Stamm U.S. Pat. No. 3,712,706; and also is taught in detail in Pricone U.S. Pat. No. 4,478,769. Each of these patents is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,478,769 describes a well-known method of making triangular cube corner elements, in which the planar surface of a master plate is ruled with a diamond cutting tool that cuts a series of precise parallel vee-grooves. To rule equilateral triangular cube corners, three sets of parallel grooves intersecting one another at angles of 60° are made; each groove also will have an included angle of substantially 70.53° disposed symmetrically, and will be ruled to a groove depth determined by the height of the cube corners desired. This method automatically results in an array of pairs of oppositely oriented equilateral triangular microcubes on the face of the master. To rule non-equilateral triangle cube corners the grooves within the parallel sets will contain angles other than 70.53°, and intersect at angles other than 60°, as disclosed, for example in Rowland U.S. Pat. No. 3,384,348. Methods for ruling non-triangle cube corners generally do not use three sets of parallel symmetrically disposed vee-grooves, but the faces of the cube corners are nevertheless formed from the walls of grooves, as disclosed, for example in Nelson U.S. Pat. No. 4,938,563.
The ruled master may then be used to make a series of duplicates, such as by electroforming, and the duplicates are assembled together to form a single “mother” tool. The assembled “mother” tool is used to electroform molds, which then can be assembled into a tool capable of providing microcube retroreflective elements on a web of plastic sheeting material such as by embossing, casting, or other methods known in the art.
Microcube corner retroreflective sheeting such as made by the method described above is used in highway safety applications such as highway signs and pavement markers. In such applications, the microcube corner elements retroreflect light from a vehicle's headlights back to the driver of the vehicle. This is an inexact retroreflection in which the divergence angle, α, ranges between approximately 0° and more than 3°. The value of α operative in any given situation depends on the geometry of the vehicle and the distance from the vehicle to the retroreflective material. For example, the divergence angle α for a large truck's right headlight and its driver at a distance of about 40 meters from a road sign will be approximately 3°, while the divergence angle α for an automobile's left headlight and its driver at a distance of about 600 meters from a road sign will be approximately 0.05°.
Also associated with the divergence angle, α, is a rotation angle, ε, which is a measure of the direction of the divergence. The value of ε will be different for left and right headlights of a vehicle, and will also depend on the vehicle geometry and the position of the road sign.
Ideally, microcube corner retroreflective sheeting used in road signs will produce a pattern of retroreflected light having sufficient intensity over a range of divergence angle values and rotation angle values. For example, even a non-urban retroreflective highway sign should retroreflect light through a divergence angle α of about 1°, which corresponds to the value of α from a large truck's right headlight back to its driver at a distance of about 120 meters from the road sign.
Improvements in the precision with which microcube corner elements can be ruled in a master plate and duplicated by embossing have led to concerns that such microcube corner retroreflective sheeting may be retroreflective over only a very narrow range of divergence angle, such as about 0.0–0.5 degrees, as well as narrow ranges of rotation angle. It would be preferred to provide a ruled array with cube corners producing the entire desired range of divergence and within very short distances on the ruled array.
Light that is retroreflected by micro-sized cube corner elements will experience a certain amount of diffraction because of the very small size of the microcubes. Such diffraction will result in retroreflection over broader ranges of both divergence angle and rotation angle. The particular ranges of α and ε will depend on the particular diffraction pattern of a given microcube, which will depend in turn upon the cube size, cube shape, the index of refraction of the cube material, and upon whether or not the cube faces have been metallized. Diffraction, however, is not a desirable method to enhance retroreflection through broader divergence and rotational angle, because the very small microcubes that achieve greater diffraction also cause a substantial quantity of light to be retroreflected with a divergence angle α of greater than about 3°, where the light is not useful to the vehicle driver. This is summarized in Table 1.
Table 1 indicates the spreading of retroreflection due to diffraction. Acrylic equilateral triangle cube corners are used in each case. The millimeter dimension measures the edge length of the triangle (identically 2.449×the cube depth, or 1.155×the ruling spacing). The percentages indicate how much of the total retroreflected flux is within a 1°, 2°, or 3° maximum observation angle. For example, for the triangle cube corner with side 0.05 mm only 27.9% of the total retroreflected light arrives between 0° and 1° observation angles.
TABLE 1
Diffraction spreading of retroreflection from different
size triangle cube corners
0.4 mm 0.2 mm 0.1 mm 0.05 mm
0° to 1° 91.6% 82.5% 66.7% 27.9%
0° to 2° 95.7% 91.6% 82.4% 66.6%
0° to 3° 97.1% 94.4% 88.9% 79.1%
Diffraction results in idiosyncratic patterns which are unlikely to distribute the retroreflected light in a manner that will be most useful to a vehicle's driver. This is shown in FIGS. 4A–D.
It is known in the art to create intentional aberrations in cube corner elements by causing the dihedral angles of the cube corner elements to deviate slightly from 90°. The classic paper “Study of Light Deviation Errors in Triple Mirrors and Tetrahedral Prisms,” J. Optical Soc. Amer., vol. 48, no. 7, pp. 496–499, July, 1958 by P. R. Yoder, Jr., describes the well-known spot patterns resulting from such aberrations.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,833,285 to Heenan, assigned to the common assignee and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, teaches that having one dihedral angle of a macro-sized cube corner element greater than the other two results in extended observation angularity in macrocubes, and specifically that the retroreflected light diverges in an elongated pattern.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,775,219 to Appledorn discloses retroreflective articles having tailored divergence profiles, wherein the cube corner elements are formed by three intersecting sets of parallel vee-grooves, and wherein at least one of the sets includes, in a repeating pattern, at least two groove side angles that differ from one another.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,015,214 to Heenan et al., assigned to the common assignee, teaches methods of forming microcubes by ruling vee-grooves into the edges of a plurality of flat plates, and discloses that the tilt angle of a cutting tool with respect to the surface of the edges being ruled can be adjusted continuously as each groove is cut as a function of the distance traveled by the cutting tool along the ruled surface.
It is thus one object of the invention to provide an article comprising an array of retroreflective microcube corner elements having controlled broader divergence.
It is another object of the invention to provide methods for making such an article.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A retroreflective article having a controlled broader divergence is provided by ruling one or more sets of generally parallel vee-grooves to form a plurality of cube corner elements, each vee-groove having two side walls that intersect at a groove root, in which ruling non-uniform deviations of the cube dihedral angles from exactly 90° are intentionally introduced by causing the cutting tool and the surface of the substrate to oscillate with respect to one another in a controlled manner during the ruling of at least one of the vee-grooves. The vee-groove so formed will be an undulating groove. The cube corner element dihedral angles having at least one face defined by a side wall of an undulating vee-groove will be non-orthogonal to varying extents, depending on the phase, frequency, and amplitude of the oscillation during ruling. This introduction of variable, controlled non-orthogonality of dihedral angles within very short distances of each other on a single ruled groove will result in a controlled broader divergence of the ultimate retroreflective article made from such ruled cube corner elements.
DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
FIG. 1 illustrates a substrate oriented in the x-y plane and having a vee-groove ruled in the y-direction using the method of the prior art; and
FIG. 2 illustrates a small portion of an array of cube corner elements made in accordance with the first described mode of practicing the invention, in which the magnitude of the groove undulation and the deviations of the dihedral angles are greatly exaggerated for the sake of illustration.
FIG. 3 illustrates a small portion of an array of cube corner elements made in accordance with the third described mode of practicing the invention, in which the magnitude of the groove undulation and the deviations of the dihedral angles are greatly exaggerated for the sake of illustration.
FIGS. 4A–D illustrate diffraction patterns from four different prior art unaberrated cube corners. The patterns show observation angle from 0° to 3° over all rotation angles. The entrance angle is 0°. The illustrations scale the pattern logarithmically so that one step corresponds to retroreflectance difference of approximately 2.5 times. FIG. 4A is for an uncanted acrylic triangle cube, 0.2 mm base dimension, 0.082 mm ruling depth. FIG. 4B is for the identical cube corner when aluminized. FIG. 4C is for a −9.74° (face more parallel) canted acrylic triangle cube, 0.256 mm base, 0.091 mm ruling depth. FIG. 4D is for a +11.17° (edge more parallel) acrylic triangle cube, 0.194 mm base, 0.089 mm ruling depth. Cube sizes have been chosen having equal optical active areas for purpose of diffraction comparison.
FIG. 5 illustrates the calculated diffraction pattern for the prior art cube corner of FIG. 4A, but with a simple aberration of +14 arc minutes on each dihedral angle. The geometric spot pattern has an average divergence of 1.1°.
FIGS. 6A–B illustrate calculated diffraction patterns for the cube corner of FIG. 4A, but with aberrations in accordance with the first mode of the present invention. FIG. 6A uses a sinusoidal undulation on each of three grooves sufficient to give the geometric pattern an average divergence of 1.1°. FIG. 6B uses a combination of a simple aberration of 9 arc minutes on each dihedral angle with a sinusoidal undulation on each of three grooves sufficient to give the geometric pattern an average divergence of 1.1°.
FIGS. 7A–B illustrate calculated diffraction patterns for the cube corner of FIG. 4A, but with aberrations in accordance with the first mode of the present invention being applied unequally to the three grooves. For FIG. 7A only one of the three grooves receives sinusoidal undulation. For FIG. 7B two of the three grooves receive sinusoidal undulation. For each of these designs, the geometric light pattern has an average divergence of 1.1°.
FIG. 8 compares of two forms of undulation called “sin” and “sin±½ sin2”.
FIG. 9 compares the calculated observation angularity of the prior art aberrationless triangle cube corner for FIG. 4A, with four triangle cube corners aberrated in accordance with the instant invention, being those for FIG. 5, FIG. 6A, the “sin±½ sin2” variant of FIG. 6A, and FIG. 6B.
FIG. 10 illustrates the application of equations (1)–(3) to the first described mode of the invention.
FIG. 11 illustrates the application of equations (4)–(6) to the second described mode of the invention.
FIG. 12 illustrates the application of equations (10)–(12) to the third and fourth described modes of the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Cube corner retroreflective articles made by a process including the step of ruling one or more sets of generally parallel vee-grooves in a surface with a vee-shaped cutting tool can be provided with a controlled broader divergence by oscillating the cutting tool and the substrate with respect to one another in a controlled manner as the tool cuts one or more vee-grooves. The controlled oscillation during ruling will result in an undulating vee-groove producing a controlled variation in the dihedral angles of the cube corner elements on either side of the undulating groove, which will controllably broaden the divergence of the ultimate retroreflective article. Preferably, an entire desired range of divergence will be provided over very short increments of groove length.
The term “attitude” as used herein shall mean the orientation of a defined axis of a cutting tool relative to the substrate surface to be ruled. The defined axis will begin at the tool tip and point generally away from the substrate surface.
The term “cube corner elements” as used herein includes those elements consisting of three mutually intersecting faces, the dihedral angles of which are generally on the order of 90°, but not necessarily exactly 90°.
The term “groove root” as used herein means the continuous curve defined by the motion of the point of the cutting tool under the surface being ruled. A “groove root” cut in accordance with the method of this invention can be either straight or wavy, depending on the mode of operation of the instant invention.
The term “groove angle” as used herein means the included angle, measured in a plane normal to the groove root, between the two walls of the groove cut into the surface by the cutting tool at any given point along the groove length.
The phrase “the cutting tool and the substrate oscillate with respect to one another,” and substantial equivalents as used herein, shall mean that during the ruling of a vee-groove either the cutting tool oscillates with respect to the substrate, or the substrate oscillates with respect to the cutting tool, or both the cutting tool and the substrate oscillate at the same time, so as to create an undulating vee-groove.
The term “divergence” as used herein is the angle between a light ray that enters a retroreflecting element (e.g., a cube corner) and the light ray after leaving that element.
FIG. 1 illustrates a perspective view of a substrate 20 having a planar surface 22 on which vee-grooves can be ruled with a vee-shaped cutting tool, such as is known in the art. As illustrated in FIG. 1, the substrate 20 is oriented with the surface 22 to be ruled disposed in the x-y reference plane of the x-y-z orthogonal reference system, wherein the z direction is perpendicular to the surface 22. Throughout this patent, the terms “the x-y plane,” “the x-z plane,” and “the y-z plane,” will mean the x-y reference plane, x-z reference plane, and y-z reference plane, as defined by the x, y, and z reference axes of FIG. 1. FIG. 1 further illustrates a typical vee-groove 24 of the prior art ruled parallel to the y-axis, with the groove root 25 being a straight line at a constant z-depth relative to the surface 22, and the groove having constant included angle.
It is to be understood that for rulings on a non-flat substrate, the methods of this invention will require small modifications obvious to one skilled in the art. Such modifications are considered to be within the scope of this invention.
The instant invention will be described in terms of four modes of operation. It will be understood, however, that these four modes of operation are not necessarily mutually exclusive, and that two or more such modes of operation can be employed simultaneously. For ease of understanding, the modes of operation are described and illustrated herein with respect to the simplest case in which the cube corner elements being ruled are uncanted equilateral triangles. The applicability of the instant invention is not so limited, however, and the methods of the invention can be applied to canted triangular rulings, and hexagonal and rectangular cube corner elements such as are illustrated and described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,914,813 (Smith et al.); U.S. Pat. No. 5,721,640 (Smith et al.); U.S. Pat. No. 4,938,563 (Nelson et al.); and U.S. Pat. No. 4,895,428 (Nelson et al.). Further, while the undulations illustrated and described herein are most easily imagined as sinusoidal, it will be appreciated that such sinusoidal undulations are not a requirement of the instant invention. There is only the requirement that the undulations must be piecewise smooth and that the tool accelerations be such that they will not break the tool or ruin the cutting. A single groove can be made in several consecutive parts, each of which includes some aspect of undulation.
By way of example and not by way of limitation, FIG. 8 illustrates two forms of undulation curves suitable for use in the various modes of operation of the instant invention. The curve labeled “sin” is a perfect sinusoid. The curve labeled “sin±½ sin2” follows the function sin−½ sin2 from 0 to π and then the function sin±½ sin2 from π to 2π, and continues to alternate between the two functions. The sin±½/sin2 undulation, by having nearly flatted regions, gives more weight to the unaberrated cubes. In FIG. 8, the sin undulation was adjusted to 0.6*sin so as to produce the same average geometric divergence as the sin±½/sin2 undulation, in order to provide a more appropriate basis of comparison. It will be understood that the horizontal and vertical scales of FIG. 8 require further adjustment to the dimensions of the cube corner ruling, such as shown in Table 2.
The two curves in FIG. 9 labeled “20[sin]” and “33[sin±½ sin2]” show the difference in observation angularity for the sin and sin±½ sin2 undulations illustrated in FIG. 8, respectively. Both undulations were chosen to give average geometric divergence of 1.1°. The bracket notation used in this application for denoting undulatory designs describes the extent of undulation. “20[sin]” denotes sinusoidal undulation of such amplitude and pitch that the single such groove contributes a maximum of 20 arc minutes of dihedral angle error in the ruling. “33[sin±½ sin2]” denotes sin±½ sin2 undulation of such amplitude and pitch that the single such groove contributes a maximum of 33 arc minutes of dihedral angle error in the ruling. That both rulings produce the same 1.1° average geometric divergence in the acrylic product is explained by the sin±½ sin2 undulation having nearly flatted regions and thereby producing a greater proportion of nearly unaberrated cubes in the population. Undulations useful for the present invention do not have to be perfectly periodic and do not have to follow any explicit mathematical functions.
The four simplest modes of operation of the invention are explained below. In the following discussion, the notation {dot over (δ)} shall mean the change in the rise or fall of each groove root introduced by the first mode of operation of the instant invention; the notation {umlaut over (δ)} shall mean the change in the direction of the groove root within the x-y plane introduced by the second mode of operation of the instant invention; and the notation δ ...
shall mean the change in the half angles of the respective grooves as ruled in accordance with both the third and fourth modes of operation of the instant invention.
First Mode—Vertical Undulation
In a first mode of operation of the instant invention, the cutting tool is maintained at a constant attitude with respect to the substrate, and during the ruling of at least one vee-groove the cutting tool and the substrate oscillate with respect to one another in a vertical direction, i.e., in a direction parallel to the z-axis of FIG. 1. This will result in a vee-groove having a non-constant groove angle. The resulting groove root is a vertically undulating curve. The two-dimensional projection of the groove root in the x-y plane is a straight line. However, the intersection of the groove wall with the x-y plane is a horizontally undulating curve. In accordance with the definition of the phrase “the cutting tool and the substrate oscillate with respect to one another” as set forth above, it will be appreciated that the same effect can be achieved either by holding the substrate in a fixed position, and moving the tip of the cutting tool in a vertically undulating curve, while maintaining the attitude of the cutting tool constant, or by vertical oscillation of the substrate while the cutting tool is moving in a straight line, or by simultaneous out-of-phase movement in the z-direction of both the cutting tool and the substrate. The choice of whether to move the cutting tool, or the substrate, or both during the cutting of the vee-groove will depend upon the design and functionality of the graver that controls the cutting tool and the fixture that holds the substrate.
A first, inconsequential, effect of this first mode of operation of the instant invention is the introduction of intersection errors in a pattern of ruled triangular cube corner elements. That is, even if the other two groove sets are formed entirely of straight grooves of the prior art, the vertically undulating groove root made in accordance with the first mode of operation of the instant invention will not always intersect the vertices of the other two groove sets at their exact points of intersection.
A second, consequential, effect of this first mode of operation of the invention is the purposeful introduction of variations or “errors” in the dihedral angles of cubes having a cube face formed by a side wall of an undulating groove. The frequency of the oscillation will be such that one period of oscillation spans several cube corner widths. Thus, for a single triangular cube described in part by a segment of an undulating groove root, the groove root segment is essentially descending, essentially ascending, or essentially level. The cube dihedral angle terminating at or near the lower end of a groove root segment will be slightly more obtuse than had the groove root been level. Similarly, the cube dihedral angle terminating at or near the raised end of a groove root segment will be slightly more acute, than had the groove root segment been level. For substantially equilateral triangle cube corners, the change to the cube dihedral angle is the groove slope angle divided by √6. Generally, where all three grooves that define a cube corner element are vertically undulating grooves, then for each such cube corner element, the deviation in depth of each groove will affect the two dihedral angles defined in part by that groove side wall, with the total effect on the dihedral angles being very nearly additive.
FIG. 10 summarizes the aberrations due to the first mode when the undulation is long enough that curvature within a single cube is insignificant. A male equilateral triangle cube corner is illustrated as formed by three grooves. Each of the grooves g1, g2, g3 are shown rising by a corresponding angular amount {dot over (δ)}1, {dot over (δ)}2, {dot over (δ)}3 in the direction indicated. If a {dot over (δ)} value is negative, then the groove is instead falling. The three dihedral edges are labeled with their angle errors, e1; e2; e3, that is, their deviations from perfect 90°. The dihedral angle errors are given by approximate equations (1)–(3). e 1 δ . 3 - δ . 2 6 ( 1 ) e 2 δ . 1 - δ . 3 6 ( 2 ) e 3 δ . 2 - δ . 1 6 ( 3 )
It will be appreciated that these equations require some adjustment for non-equilateral triangle cube corners.
FIG. 2 roughly represents a portion of a single groove g ruled in accordance with the first mode of operation of the invention, viewed as a projection in the x-y plane, wherein the depth of the cutting tool is varied with respect to the plane of ruling. In this case, the tip of the cutting tool is rising as the tool moves along the groove g from left to right in the Figure. In each cube, dihedral angle d1 terminates at or near the lower end of the groove root segment, and dihedral angle d2 terminates at or near the raised end of a groove root segment. Then in all ten cubes illustrated the dihedral angles d1 will be slightly greater than 90°, and the dihedral angles d2 will be slightly less than 90°. It may be seen in FIG. 2 that the dihedral angles d1 and d2 need not terminate exactly at groove root g, but can terminate near the groove root. It also may be seen that the dihedral angle d3 is unaffected by the undulation of groove root g.
Second Mode—Horizontal Undulation
In a second mode of operation, the cutting tool is maintained at a constant attitude and a constant depth with respect to the substrate, and during the ruling of at least one vee-groove the cutting tool and the substrate oscillate with respect to one another in a horizontal direction sidewise to the direction of ruling. This will result in a groove of constant depth along the z-axis and substantially constant groove angle, and wherein the groove root is an undulating curve in a plane parallel to the x-y plane. It will be appreciated that the same effect can be achieved by holding the substrate in a fixed position, and moving the tip of the cutting tool in an undulating curve in the x-y plane, while maintaining the attitude of the cutting tool constant, or by horizontal oscillation of the substrate while the cutting tool moves in a straight line, or by simultaneous out-of-phase horizontal movement of both the cutting tool and the substrate. The choice of whether to move the cutting tool or the substrate, or both, will depend upon the design and functionality of the graver that controls the cutting tool and the fixture that holds the substrate. Such choices will be understood by those skilled in the ruling arts. Further, where the aim of the cutting tool is constant, rather than tangent to the undulating curve, there will be a very slight variation in groove angle, but this variation will not have a significant effect on divergence for the amplitudes of groove undulations applicable to the instant invention.
A first, inconsequential, effect of this second mode of operation of the instant invention is the introduction of intersection errors in a pattern of ruled triangular cube corner elements. That is, even if the other two groove sets are formed entirely of straight grooves of the prior art, the horizontally undulating groove root made in accordance with the second mode of operation of the instant invention will not always intersect the vertices of the other two groove sets at their exact points of intersection.
A second, consequential, effect of this second mode of operation of the invention is that the three corner angles of a triangular cube corner are modified. The dihedral angle of a triangle cube corner is made acute if it meets a triangle corner at which the angle has been modified to be smaller. Similarly the dihedral angle of a triangle cube corner is made obtuse if it meets a triangle corner at which the angle has been modified to be larger. For a substantially equilateral triangle cube corner, the change to a dihedral angle is approximately equal to the change to the corresponding triangle corner angle divided by √3. These changes to the dihedral angles of the affected cube corners result in a cube corner article having broader divergence.
FIG. 11 summarizes aberrations resulting from the second mode when the undulation is long enough that curvature within a single cube is insignificant. A male equilateral triangle cube corner is illustrated as formed by three grooves. Each of the grooves forming the triangle is shown rotated by a corresponding angular amount {umlaut over (δ)}1, {umlaut over (δ)}2, {umlaut over (δ)}3 in the direction indicated. If a {umlaut over (δ)} value is negative, then the groove is rotated oppositely. The three dihedral edges are labeled with their angle errors, e1, e2, e3, that is, their deviations from perfect 90°: The dihedral angle errors are then given by approximate equations (4)–(6). e 1 δ ¨ 3 - δ ¨ 2 3 ( 4 ) e 2 δ ¨ 1 - δ ¨ 3 3 ( 5 ) e 3 δ ¨ 2 - δ ¨ 1 3 ( 6 )
It will be appreciated that these equations require some adjustment for non-equilateral triangle cube corners.
Third Mode—Rocking To and Fro
In a third mode of operation of the invention, at least one vee-groove is ruled so that the movement of the tip of the cutting tool defines a straight groove root parallel to the x-y plane, and the attitude of the cutting tool oscillates within a plane containing the groove root. That is, the upper end of the cutting tool oscillates to and fro parallel to the direction of the groove. The attitude of the tool with respect to the substrate must be controlled as a function of the position of the cutting tool along the groove. In this third mode of operation, the center of oscillation is preferably the tip of the cutting tool. This mode produces a groove having groove walls that undulate such that the included groove angle expands and contracts along the length of the groove.
As the attitude of the cutting tool oscillates in accordance with this third mode of the invention, the included groove angle will vary continuously according to the well-known adjustment technique for groove angle. A vee cutter with included half-angle h, raked to angle R, cuts a groove of half-angle H, slightly larger than h, as given by equation (8). H = tan - 1 ( tan h cos R ) ( 8 )
Regardless of the direction of rake, consider R positive. Consider a small variation, of magnitude much less than the rake itself, applied to R. The variation ΔR may be positive or negative. When the rake angle changes to R+ΔR, the included half-angle H of the groove changes by an amount ΔH given by approximate equation (9).
ΔH≈sin cos sin R×ΔR  (9)
Thus a rake undulation in the vee cutter produces an approximately proportional undulation in the half-groove angle.
FIG. 3 illustrates ten cube corners along a portion of a groove that narrows from left to right. The groove walls produced in accordance with this third mode of the invention will intersect the x-y plane in undulatory curves corresponding to the variations in included groove angle. These variations of the groove angle along the length of the groove will result in variations in the dihedral angles of the cube corner elements defined in part by the groove side walls. For each of the cubes illustrated in FIG. 3, the two dihedral angles d1 and d2 are approximately equal, while their averaged value decreases from cube to cube from left to right along the illustrated portion of groove g. The dihedral angles d3 remain unaffected. For substantially equilateral triangle cube corners, increasing a groove's included angle has the effect of increasing the cube dihedral angles formed in part from that groove by an amount equal to the groove's increase divided by 2√2. Similarly, reducing a groove's included angle reduces corresponding cube dihedral angles by the same 2√2 factor. For a substantially equilateral triangle cube corner formed from two or more modified grooves, the modifications to the cube dihedral angles are very nearly sums of the effects of the separate groove modifications. The purposely introduced variations in cube dihedral angles will result in a cube corner retroreflective article of broader divergence.
FIG. 12 summarizes the aberrations due to the third mode when the undulation is long enough that curvature within a single cube is insignificant. A male equilateral triangle cube corner is illustrated as formed by three grooves. Each of the grooves forming the triangle are designated by their half-groove angle errors, δ ... 1 , δ ... 2 , δ ... 3 ,
that is, their deviations from perfect 35.26° The three dihedral edges are labeled with their angle errors, e1, e2, e3, that is, their deviations from perfect 90°. The dihedral angle errors are then given by approximate equations (10)–(12). e 1 δ ... 3 + δ ... 2 2 ( 10 ) e 2 δ ... 1 + δ ... 3 2 ( 11 ) e 3 δ ... 2 + δ ... 1 2 ( 12 )
It will be appreciated that these equations require some adjustment for non-equilateral triangle cube corners.
Fourth Mode—Rocking Side to Side
Whereas the foregoing third mode of operation can be understood as “forward-backward” oscillation of the attitude of the cutting tool, the fourth mode of operation of the invention uses “side-to-side” oscillation of the cutting tool. That is, the tip of the cutting tool still defines a straight groove root parallel to the x-y plane, while the attitude of the cutting tool oscillates within planes perpendicular to the groove root. That is, the attitude oscillates transverse to the direction of the ruling. In this method, while the magnitude of the groove angle itself will not change along the length of the groove, the progressive change in attitude of the cutting tool along the groove will result in variations in the angle between the x-y plane and the groove walls that produce the cube corner elements on either side of the groove. The dihedral angles of the cube corner elements defined in part by the undulating groove surfaces will thereby be modified, similarly to the third mode of operation of the invention. The identical equations (10)–(12) apply to this fourth mode. These errors in the dihedral angles will in turn result in a cube corner retroreflective article of broader divergence.
Curvature
It is contemplated that the undulatory method of the instant invention can give deviations from flatness of the ruled cube corner faces on the order of 0.01°. For the sizes of cube corners contemplated, this will be just a small fraction of a wavelength of visible light. This effect will be insignificant, particularly when the retroreflective article made from the cube corner array is sheeting, retroreflective fabric, or traffic control devices.
A Difference Among the Modes
For either equations (1)–(3) (i.e., the first mode of operation) or equations (4)–(6) (i.e., the second mode of operation) it is seen that equation (7) must hold.
e 1 +e 2 +e 3=0  (7)
Thus, the first and second modes, applied as described, result in cube corners with no net dihedral angle error. It is sometimes desireable to have net dihedral angle error, as shown in Example 4 below. To produce net error by the first or second modes, it is a simple matter to incorporate a bias error beneath the errors produced by undulation. For example, the groove angles can be chosen different from the perfect 70.53°, and these imperfect grooves can be subjected to vertical (first mode) or horizontal (second mode) undulation. To determine the imperfect groove angles desired for the bias, equations (10)–(12) may be solved for the groove errors in terms of the dihedral errors. This gives new equations (13)–(15). δ ... 1 - e 1 + e 2 + e 3 2 ( 13 ) δ ... 2 + e 1 - e 2 + e 3 2 ( 14 ) δ ... 3 + e 1 + e 2 - e 3 2 ( 15 )
Again, it will be appreciated that these equations require some adjustment for non-equilateral triangle cube corners. The δ ... 1 , δ ... 2 , δ ... 3 .
from equations (13)–(15) will serve as a biasing adjustment to the groove angles which will then be undulated to produce the additional errors according to the first or second mode. When using the third or fourth modes, no separate biasing is necessary, since the biases discovered from equations (13)–(15) can be parts of the δ ... 1 , δ ... 2 , δ ... 3
of the undulation.
In each of the foregoing modes of operation of the invention, the result will be that the dihedral angles of the cube corner elements formed by the grooves cut by the inventive method will differ from one cube corner element to the next. This non-equivalency of the cube corner elements will broaden, in a controlled manner, the divergence of a retroreflective structure made from an array including the non-equivalent cube corner elements.
It will be appreciated that the modes of operation described above can be used in any combination. Where the cube corner elements are made from three intersecting sets of approximately parallel grooves, the groove variations can be made in any number of grooves in a set, and in one, two, or three sets. If grooves in more than one set are varied, the result will be, in general, a randomized combination of three dihedral angles in each cube.
Also each undulation can be a compound undulation, produced by a combination of any number of the basic four modes, or any other mode, of oscillation. For example the graver can be oscillating both vertically and horizontally at once (mode 1+mode 2), or it can be rocking to-and-fro and side-to-side at once (mode 3+mode 4), or any of the nine other logical combinations. In compound modes, the amplitude and length of undulations need not agree. In all such cases, the equation sets (1)–(3), (4)–(6), and (10)–(12) can be separately applied to obtain the dihedral angle errors for one cube, and the separate results added to determine the dihedral angle errors of the compound mode undulation.
FIGS. 10–12 and corresponding equation sets (1)–(3), (4)–(6), and (10)–(12) show the effect of the different modes of the invention on the aberration of a single cube corner. The purpose of this invention is to enable the optical designer to produce an array with a great variety of aberrated cube corners. Each triangle cube corner has six contiguous neighbors (two at each of its vertices) with its same orientation. Each of these neighbors of the first cube corner will in general have quite different aberrations from the first, because these neighbors will be formed from one groove in common with the first, which will have changed slightly, and two grooves not in common with the first, which can have undulations out of phase with the undulations of the corresponding grooves forming the first cube. Those skilled in the art will recognize that not all geometrical light patterns are achievable by the present invention. For one thing, as shown in the Yoder paper, there are limits on the geometrical light distributions achievable by dihedral aberrations. For another, not all distributions of dihedral aberration are achievable by the present invention. Any technique that randomly combines three groove variations must include all “cross terms”, that is, for any part of the groove 1 variation, any part of the groove 2 variation, and any part of the groove 3 variation, these three parts will occur together in forming a cube corner somewhere in the array. This makes the invention more suitable for smooth spreadings of the retroreflection than for precise arrangements of the light, as illustrated in Examples 3–6 described below.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLES
All of the following Examples 1–6 will be based on an uncanted acrylic triangle cube corner having 0.2 mm base dimension corresponding to 0.082 mm ruling depth. Observation angles from 0° to 3° will be considered, while entrance angle is fixed at 0°. The light source is assumed to have the spectral power distribution of CIE Illuminant A, corresponding to an incandescent lamp, and the detector is assumed to have the spectral sensitivity function CIE V(λ), corresponding to human photopic vision.
All of the example outcomes are results of optical calculation. Undulatory modelings are based on 1000 randomly generated cube corners. A shorthand has been employed in describing sinusoidal undulations: N[sin] will be understood as undulation of degree such that the single such groove contributes up to N arc minutes to dihedral angle error.
Example 1 Prior Art
The first example is the perfect, unaberrated cube corner with retroreflected light pattern shown in FIG. 4A. The geometric light pattern must have zero divergence, but the cube size introduces noticeable diffraction, as summarized in Table 1. The observation angle aspect of the diffraction light pattern is also shown in FIG. 9 as the curve labelled “aberrationless”. The curve in FIG. 9 is derived from FIG. 4A.
The geometrical light pattern from a single cube corner consists of six punctal spots, as explained in the cited work of P. R. Yoder, Jr. An unaberrated cube corner produces its six spots in coincidence. In the following Examples 2–6 different techniques are used to aberrate cube corners. For purposes of comparison, the aberrations in each of these examples are chosen so that the geometrical light pattern in each case has average divergence approximately 1.1°, where the divergence is measured from the centroid of all the punctal spots. All illustrations show diffraction light patterns rather than geometrical patterns, as this is what small cube corners really produce.
Example 2 Prior Art
Example 2 represents the simplest way known to the prior art to make an array of aberrated cube corners having average geometric divergence of 1.1°. Each dihedral angle of each cube corner is made 14 minutes greater than the perfect 90°. FIG. 5 shows the resulting diffraction pattern. Most of the energy is near the characteristic six punctal spots as described above, which diffraction joins into a ring. FIG. 9 shows the ring as a hump in the curve labeled 14,14,14, peaking at about 1.1°. The average intensity at 1.1° observation angle is about eight times the intensity at 0° observation angle. A retroreflector of this kind would not have road applications since it only functions well over such a short range of observation angles that, at any distance, the full range of vehicles (from trucks to cars) could not benefit. It could have specialized applications for instrumentation.
Examples 3–6 illustrate rulings that can be made in accordance with the instant invention. The illustrative rulings have planned aberrations that result in broadened divergence profiles. In all these examples, the undulations are adjusted to give the same average geometric divergence, 1.1°, as in prior art Example 2. FIGS. 6A and 6B illustrate smooth divergence spreadings achieved with the rulings of Examples 3 and 4, while FIGS. 7A and 7B show some limited aiming capabilities achieved with the rulings of Examples 5 and 6. Table 2 gives the ruling details corresponding to Examples 3–6.
TABLE 2
Ruling details using vertical undulation
EXAMPLE SHORTHAND FIGURE FORM PITCH AMPLITUDE START
33[sin ± ½ sin2] sin ± ½ sin2 4 mm 0.0097 mm random
3 20[sin] 6A sin 4 mm 0.0116 mm random
4 9 + 15[sin] 6B sin 4 mm 0.0087 mm random
5 35[sin] on G3 7A sin 4 mm 0.0204 mm random
6 24[sin] on G1 & G2 7B sin 4 mm 0.0135 mm random

FIG. 9 illustrates the observation angularity achieved with the rulings of Examples 1–4, as well as the 33[sin±½ sin2]
Example 3
For Example 3 sinusoidal vertical undulation is assumed according to Mode 1 of this invention. Ruling dimensions are shown in Table 2 under 20[sin]. FIG. 6A shows the resulting calculated diffraction pattern. It has a gentle central peak and is uncluttered with diffraction and aberration artifacts out to about 2° observation angle. This is the beneficial result of the cube corners not being alike as they were in Examples 1 and 2. FIG. 9 shows the observation angularity of Example 3 as curve 20[sin]. Its intensity at 1.1° is only 37% that of prior art Example 2 at 1.1°. However its intensity at 0° is 16 times that of prior art Example 2, and its intensity at 2° is 2.2 times that of prior art Example 2. Unlike Example 2, a retroreflector having the aberrated cube corners of Example 3 is not limited to close applications, but performs well over a broad distance range.
Example 4
For Example 4 sinusoidal vertical undulation according to Mode 1 is assumed in combination with a bias of 9 arc minutes error on each dihedral angle. That is, all the grooves are initially planned to make 9 arc minutes of dihedral error and a sinusoidal undulation 15/20 as great as that of Example 3 is superimposed on this. Ruling dimensions are given in Table 2 under 9+15[sin]. FIG. 6B shows the resulting diffraction pattern, practically flat to about 1.5°. It must be appreciated that the diffraction pattern illustrations are logarithmically scaled and one step corresponds to difference in retroreflectance of approximately 2.5 times. FIG. 9 shows that the observation angularity of Example 4 is nearly flat to about 1.5°. Example 4 could function as a close distance retroreflector in road applications.
Example 5
Example 5 shows the effect of sinusoidal vertical undulation according to Mode 1 but assumed for only one set of grooves, G3, of the three sets of grooves G1, G2, G3 ruled to make triangular cube corners. Ruling dimensions are given in Table 2 under “35[sin] on G3.” Equations (1)–(3) show how this affects two of the three dihedral angles. FIG. 7A shows the diffraction pattern. This example illustrates how the method can produce patterns with directed observation angularity. This is the reason this Example 5 is not included among the curves of FIG. 9, which are averages over all directions.
Example 6
Example 6 shows the effect of sinusoidal vertical undulation according to Mode 1 assumed for two of the three groove sets. Ruling dimensions are given in Table 2 under “24[sin] on G1&G2.” Equations (1)–(3) show how this affects two of the three dihedral angles. FIG. 7B shows the diffraction pattern. This example illustrates a different type of directed observation angularity that can be achieved with the method of the instant invention.
It will be appreciated that while Examples 3–6 use Mode 1, using the dimensions in Table 2, Mode 2 could have been used with different dimensions to give identical results and Modes 3 or 4 to give almost identical results.
Preferably, the entire desired range of divergence will be provided over a short increment of groove length, in order to avoid a spotty appearance. For retroreflective road sign applications there should be no patches larger than about 4 mm diameter visibly different from adjacent patches. Practical undulatory methods are possible in which the graver makes its entire cycle of change within 4 mm. For the first or second modes of the invention, typical groove undulations have approximately 10 micron amplitude over 4 mm cycle. Using the first or second modes of the instant invention, sinusoidal undulation on all three of the grooves results in cube corner dihedral angle errors having a distribution curve that can be described as resembling the shape of a smaller triangle mounted upon a larger trapezoid.
It may be seen that, in each single-mode of operation of the invention, the amplitude of the movement of either the cutting tool, or the substrate, or both, can be either constant or variable, both along the length of a single groove and from one groove to the next, thus facilitating controlled broadening of observation angularity anywhere on the ruled substrate as desired by the ruling designer. When modes are compounded, they need not agree in amplitude or length. Further, such controlled variability can be introduced into one, two, or all three of the groove sets, in the ruling of triangular microcubes, and into some or all of the grooves in each groove set.
The rulings made by the methods described herein can be used to make retroreflective products according to methods known in the art. For example, the ruled surface can be replicated through successive generations, and the replicates can be assembled together either with or without replicates of unaberrated cube corner arrays. Seamless copies of the assembly can be made such as by electrodeposition of nickel to provide tools of uniform thickness. Tools having such patterns of cube corner elements can be used to manufacture retroreflective products such as sheeting. Such manufacturing methods are known in the art and include, for example, embossing, casting, and compression molding. The tool of the instant invention can be used in each of these manufacturing methods and variations thereof.
The invention has been described herein in terms of preferred embodiments and methodologies. Those skilled in the art will recognize that variations can be made to the embodiment disclosed herein within the scope of the invention.

Claims (24)

1. A method of making a pattern of cube corner elements on a substrate surface comprising the step of ruling a plurality of vee-grooves into the substrate surface using a cutting tool, said substrate surface lying in the x-y plane of an orthogonal x-y-z reference system, wherein the cutting tool and the substrate surface are oscillated with respect to one another during the ruling of at least one of said vee-grooves.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein said cutting tool and said substrate surface are oscillated with respect to one another in the z direction during said ruling of said at least one of said vee-grooves.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein said cutting tool and said substrate are oscillated with respect to one another in the x-y plane sidewise to the direction of the groove during said ruling of said at least one of said vee-grooves.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein at least one vee-groove is ruled so that the movement of the tip of the cutting tool defines a straight groove root parallel to the x-y plane, and the attitude of the cutting tool oscillates within a plane containing the groove root.
5. The method of claim 1 wherein at least one vee-groove is ruled so that the movement of the tip of the cutting tool defines a straight groove root parallel to the x-y plane, and the attitude of the cutting tool oscillates within planes perpendicular to the groove root.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein at least one vee-groove is ruled so that the movement of the cutting tool relative to the substrate produces a compound undulation.
7. An article made by the method of claim 1, the article comprising a substrate surface lying parallel to the x-y plane of the orthogonal x-y-z reference system and having a pattern of cube corner elements defined by intersecting vee-grooves formed by the ruling of the cutting tool,
wherein each vee-groove comprises two groove side walls intersecting at a groove root; and
wherein at least one of the vee-grooves is an undulating groove caused by the cutting tool and the substrate surface being oscillated with respect to one another during the ruling of this vee-groove.
8. The article of claim 7 wherein said groove root of said undulating groove is a curve undulating in a plane perpendicular to the x-y plane.
9. The article of claim 7 wherein said groove root of said undulating groove is a curve undulating in a plane parallel to the x-y plane.
10. The article of claim 7 wherein said groove root of said undulating groove is a straight line parallel to the x-y plane and said groove walls of said undulating groove undulate such that the included groove angle expands and contracts along the length of the groove.
11. The article of claim 7 wherein said groove root of said undulating groove is a straight line parallel to the x-y plane and said groove walls of said undulating groove undulate such that the included groove angle is substantially constant along the length of the groove.
12. The article of claim 7 wherein said undulating groove has a compound undulation within the x-y-z reference system.
13. A method of making a retroreflective article comprising
a. making a pattern of cube corner elements on a substrate surface by ruling a plurality of vee-grooves into the substrate surface using a cutting tool, said substrate surface lying in the x-y plane of an orthogonal x-y-z reference system, wherein the cutting tool and the substrate surface are oscillated with respect to one another during the ruling of at least one of said vee-grooves;
b. making a replica tool from said ruling, said replica tool bearing said pattern of cube corner elements; and
c. using said tool to form a retroreflective article comprising a replica of said pattern of cube corner elements.
14. The method of claim 13 wherein said cutting tool and said substrate surface are oscillated with respect to one another in the z direction during said ruling of said at least one of said vee-grooves.
15. The method of claim 13 wherein said cutting tool and said substrate are oscillated with respect to one another in the x-y plane sidewise to the direction of the groove during said ruling of said at least one of said vee-grooves.
16. The method of claim 13 wherein at least one vee-groove is ruled so that the movement of the tip of the cutting tool defines a straight groove root parallel to the x-y plane, and the attitude of the cutting tool oscillates within a plane containing the groove root.
17. The method of claim 13 wherein at least one vee-groove is ruled so that the movement of the tip of the cutting tool defines a straight groove root parallel to the x-y plane, and the attitude of the cutting tool oscillates within planes perpendicular to the groove root.
18. The method of claim 13 wherein at least one vee-groove is ruled so that the movement of the cutting tool relative to the substrate produces a compound undulation.
19. A retroreflective article made by the method of claim 13, said retroreflective article comprising the replica of said pattern of cube corner elements, whereby said replica comprises intersecting vee-grooves, wherein each vee-groove comprises two groove side walls intersecting at a groove root, and wherein at least one of the vee-grooves is an undulating groove.
20. The retroreflective article of claim 19, wherein said groove root of said undulating groove is a curve undulating in a plane perpendicular to the x-y plane.
21. The retroreflective article of claim 19, wherein said groove root of said undulating groove is a curve undulating in a plane parallel to the x-y plane.
22. The retroreflective article of claim 19, wherein said groove root of said undulating groove is a straight line parallel to the x-y plane and said groove walls of said undulating groove undulate such that the included groove angle expands and contracts along the length of the groove.
23. The retroreflective article of claim 19, wherein said groove root of said undulating groove is a straight line parallel to the x-y plane and said groove walls of said undulating groove undulate such that the included groove angle is substantially constant along the length of the groove.
24. The retroreflective article of claim 19, wherein said undulating groove has a compound undulation within the x-y-z reference system.
US10/167,135 2001-06-11 2002-06-11 Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation Expired - Lifetime US6984047B2 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US10/167,135 US6984047B2 (en) 2001-06-11 2002-06-11 Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation
US11/216,564 US7427139B2 (en) 2001-06-11 2005-08-31 Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US29739401P 2001-06-11 2001-06-11
US10/167,135 US6984047B2 (en) 2001-06-11 2002-06-11 Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/216,564 Division US7427139B2 (en) 2001-06-11 2005-08-31 Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20030075815A1 US20030075815A1 (en) 2003-04-24
US6984047B2 true US6984047B2 (en) 2006-01-10

Family

ID=23146136

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US10/167,135 Expired - Lifetime US6984047B2 (en) 2001-06-11 2002-06-11 Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation
US11/216,564 Expired - Lifetime US7427139B2 (en) 2001-06-11 2005-08-31 Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/216,564 Expired - Lifetime US7427139B2 (en) 2001-06-11 2005-08-31 Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation

Country Status (9)

Country Link
US (2) US6984047B2 (en)
EP (1) EP1423258B1 (en)
KR (2) KR20040020919A (en)
CN (1) CN100406240C (en)
AU (1) AU2002312427A1 (en)
DE (1) DE60236297D1 (en)
ES (1) ES2342458T3 (en)
HK (1) HK1065975A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2002101423A2 (en)

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20070014010A1 (en) * 2003-03-06 2007-01-18 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US20070086086A1 (en) * 2006-01-13 2007-04-19 Optical Research Associates Light enhancing structures with three or more arrays of elongate features
US20070086207A1 (en) * 2006-01-13 2007-04-19 Optical Research Associates Display systems including light enhancing structures with arrays of elongate features
US20070091617A1 (en) * 2006-01-13 2007-04-26 Optical Research Associates Light enhancing structures with a plurality of arrays of elongate features
US20070091616A1 (en) * 2006-01-13 2007-04-26 Optical Research Associates Light enhancing structures with multiple arrays of elongate features of varying characteristics
US7261424B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2007-08-28 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting having high retroreflectance at low observation angles
US20080012162A1 (en) * 2006-07-17 2008-01-17 Chapman Steven R Method of making an array of aberrated optical elements
US20080074743A1 (en) * 1999-04-07 2008-03-27 3M Innovative Properties Company Structured surface articles containing geometric structures with compound faces and methods for making same
US7545569B2 (en) 2006-01-13 2009-06-09 Avery Dennison Corporation Optical apparatus with flipped compound prism structures
WO2014117086A1 (en) 2013-01-28 2014-07-31 Buoni Drew J Metalized microprismatic retroreflective film with improved observation angularity
US11351745B2 (en) 2020-08-27 2022-06-07 Aura Optical Systems, Lp Microprismatic retroreflective mold, sheet, and article and methods of manufacture thereof

Families Citing this family (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6871966B2 (en) * 2002-12-12 2005-03-29 Avery Dennison Corporation Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of localized substrate stress
US6884371B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2005-04-26 3M Innovative Properties Company Method of making retroreflective sheeting and articles
JP4727423B2 (en) * 2003-12-02 2011-07-20 日本カーバイド工業株式会社 Triangular pyramidal cube-corner retroreflective article with curved reflective sides
US7370981B2 (en) * 2003-12-24 2008-05-13 Avery Dennison Corporation Cube corner retroreflector with limited range
BRPI0616423B8 (en) * 2005-09-26 2018-09-04 Avery Dennison Corp retro-reflective laminated material
US20090213093A1 (en) * 2008-01-07 2009-08-27 Next Holdings Limited Optical position sensor using retroreflection
CN101971064B (en) 2008-01-14 2015-07-29 艾利丹尼森公司 For the retrodirective reflector of touch-screen applications and position sensing
PL2510424T3 (en) * 2009-12-11 2017-06-30 Avery Dennison Corporation Position sensing systems for use in touch screens and prismatic film used therein
CN102200599B (en) * 2011-07-20 2013-01-02 天津大学 Microprism with retroreflection property and mould manufacturing method thereof
CN109154769B (en) * 2016-03-11 2021-12-21 米拉维兹公司 Customized reflection profile features for retroreflective display system optimization
JP6846530B2 (en) * 2017-02-14 2021-03-24 スリーエム イノベイティブ プロパティズ カンパニー Security article with a group of microstructures manufactured by end milling
US10444615B2 (en) * 2017-08-29 2019-10-15 Avery Dennison Corporation Retroreflective sheeting for projector-based display system

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3384348A (en) 1966-10-13 1968-05-21 James A. Wicker Spring compressing devices
US3712706A (en) 1971-01-04 1973-01-23 American Cyanamid Co Retroreflective surface
US3833285A (en) 1973-05-22 1974-09-03 Amerace Esna Corp Retrodirective reflector visible over wide range of observation angles
US4478769A (en) 1982-09-30 1984-10-23 Amerace Corporation Method for forming an embossing tool with an optically precise pattern
US4775219A (en) 1986-11-21 1988-10-04 Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Company Cube-corner retroreflective articles having tailored divergence profiles
US4938563A (en) 1986-11-21 1990-07-03 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company High efficiency cube corner retroflective material
US6015214A (en) 1996-05-30 2000-01-18 Stimsonite Corporation Retroreflective articles having microcubes, and tools and methods for forming microcubes
US6253442B1 (en) * 1997-07-02 2001-07-03 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective cube corner sheeting mold and method for making the same

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5122902A (en) * 1989-03-31 1992-06-16 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Retroreflective articles having light-transmissive surfaces
US5324188A (en) * 1989-12-19 1994-06-28 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Roller stamper for molding a substrate sheet to become an information recording medium
WO1996030786A1 (en) 1995-03-27 1996-10-03 Reflexite Corporation Retroreflective prism arrays with uniform light distribution

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3384348A (en) 1966-10-13 1968-05-21 James A. Wicker Spring compressing devices
US3712706A (en) 1971-01-04 1973-01-23 American Cyanamid Co Retroreflective surface
US3833285A (en) 1973-05-22 1974-09-03 Amerace Esna Corp Retrodirective reflector visible over wide range of observation angles
US4478769A (en) 1982-09-30 1984-10-23 Amerace Corporation Method for forming an embossing tool with an optically precise pattern
US4775219A (en) 1986-11-21 1988-10-04 Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Company Cube-corner retroreflective articles having tailored divergence profiles
US4938563A (en) 1986-11-21 1990-07-03 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company High efficiency cube corner retroflective material
US6015214A (en) 1996-05-30 2000-01-18 Stimsonite Corporation Retroreflective articles having microcubes, and tools and methods for forming microcubes
US6253442B1 (en) * 1997-07-02 2001-07-03 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective cube corner sheeting mold and method for making the same

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
"Study of Light Deviation Errors in Triple Mirrors and Tetrahedral Prisms", P.R. Yoder, Jr., J.Optical Soc. Amer., vol. 48, No. 7, pp. 496-499 1958.

Cited By (39)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080074743A1 (en) * 1999-04-07 2008-03-27 3M Innovative Properties Company Structured surface articles containing geometric structures with compound faces and methods for making same
US7562991B2 (en) 1999-04-07 2009-07-21 3M Innovative Properties Company Structured surface articles containing geometric structures with compound faces and methods for making same
US20100232019A1 (en) * 2003-03-06 2010-09-16 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US7556386B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2009-07-07 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US8251525B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2012-08-28 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US8016435B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2011-09-13 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US7261426B2 (en) * 2003-03-06 2007-08-28 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US7261424B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2007-08-28 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting having high retroreflectance at low observation angles
US10884166B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2021-01-05 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US7329012B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2008-02-12 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US10495792B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2019-12-03 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US7422334B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2008-09-09 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US10101509B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2018-10-16 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US8714757B1 (en) 2003-03-06 2014-05-06 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US20070014012A1 (en) * 2003-03-06 2007-01-18 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US20090257124A1 (en) * 2003-03-06 2009-10-15 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US9470822B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2016-10-18 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US7722197B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2010-05-25 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US20070014010A1 (en) * 2003-03-06 2007-01-18 3M Innovative Properties Company Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
US9188715B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2015-11-17 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US8998428B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2015-04-07 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US8851686B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2014-10-07 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US8419197B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2013-04-16 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US8262237B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2012-09-11 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US8573789B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2013-11-05 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US8708504B2 (en) 2003-03-06 2014-04-29 3M Innovative Properties Company Retroreflective sheeting including cube corner elements
US9075177B2 (en) 2006-01-13 2015-07-07 Avery Dennison Corporation Light enhancing structures with a plurality of arrays of elongate features
US20070091616A1 (en) * 2006-01-13 2007-04-26 Optical Research Associates Light enhancing structures with multiple arrays of elongate features of varying characteristics
US20070086207A1 (en) * 2006-01-13 2007-04-19 Optical Research Associates Display systems including light enhancing structures with arrays of elongate features
US7866871B2 (en) 2006-01-13 2011-01-11 Avery Dennison Corporation Light enhancing structures with a plurality of arrays of elongate features
US7674028B2 (en) 2006-01-13 2010-03-09 Avery Dennison Corporation Light enhancing structures with multiple arrays of elongate features of varying characteristics
US7545569B2 (en) 2006-01-13 2009-06-09 Avery Dennison Corporation Optical apparatus with flipped compound prism structures
US20070086086A1 (en) * 2006-01-13 2007-04-19 Optical Research Associates Light enhancing structures with three or more arrays of elongate features
US20070091617A1 (en) * 2006-01-13 2007-04-26 Optical Research Associates Light enhancing structures with a plurality of arrays of elongate features
US20080012162A1 (en) * 2006-07-17 2008-01-17 Chapman Steven R Method of making an array of aberrated optical elements
US10989845B2 (en) 2006-07-17 2021-04-27 Avery Dennison Corporation Method of making an array of aberrated optical elements
WO2014117086A1 (en) 2013-01-28 2014-07-31 Buoni Drew J Metalized microprismatic retroreflective film with improved observation angularity
US11351745B2 (en) 2020-08-27 2022-06-07 Aura Optical Systems, Lp Microprismatic retroreflective mold, sheet, and article and methods of manufacture thereof
US11691365B2 (en) 2020-08-27 2023-07-04 Aura Optical Systems, Lp Microprismatic retroreflective mold, sheet, and article and methods of manufacture thereof

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
WO2002101423A3 (en) 2003-04-24
EP1423258A4 (en) 2007-04-18
KR20040020919A (en) 2004-03-09
WO2002101423A2 (en) 2002-12-19
AU2002312427A1 (en) 2002-12-23
US20060007543A1 (en) 2006-01-12
HK1065975A1 (en) 2005-03-11
CN100406240C (en) 2008-07-30
KR20040020923A (en) 2004-03-09
US20030075815A1 (en) 2003-04-24
KR100906738B1 (en) 2009-07-09
DE60236297D1 (en) 2010-06-17
CN1514769A (en) 2004-07-21
EP1423258B1 (en) 2010-05-05
ES2342458T3 (en) 2010-07-07
US7427139B2 (en) 2008-09-23
EP1423258A2 (en) 2004-06-02

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7427139B2 (en) Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of groove undulation
US6767102B1 (en) Retroreflective articles having microcubes, and tools and methods for forming microcubes
EP0342958B1 (en) High efficiency cube-corner retroreflective material
US7168814B2 (en) Retroreflector with controlled divergence made by the method of localized substrate stress
US7261424B2 (en) Retroreflective sheeting having high retroreflectance at low observation angles
US7156527B2 (en) Lamina comprising cube corner elements and retroreflective sheeting
JP3590063B2 (en) Retroreflective corner cube article and method of making the same
JPS63143502A (en) Reverse reflector
EP2773988B1 (en) Rulable multi-directional prism cluster retroreflective sheeting
KR20000016171A (en) Reflexive article having micro cube and equipment/method for producing micro cube

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION, CALIFORNIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:HEENAN, SIDNEY A. (DECEASED) BY RONALD A. SANDLER, EXECUTOR;REEL/FRAME:013176/0655

Effective date: 20020611

Owner name: AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION, CALIFORNIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:COUZIN, DENNIS I.;REEL/FRAME:013176/0665

Effective date: 20020729

STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 4

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 8

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 12

AS Assignment

Owner name: AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION, CALIFORNIA

Free format text: CHANGE OF CORPORATE ADDRESS;ASSIGNOR:AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION;REEL/FRAME:059822/0614

Effective date: 20140131

AS Assignment

Owner name: AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION, OHIO

Free format text: CHANGE OF CORPORATE ADDRESS;ASSIGNOR:AVERY DENNISON CORPORATION;REEL/FRAME:060814/0274

Effective date: 20220223